Abortion seekers ‘seven times’ more likely to be abused

CHICAGO — Women seeking an abortion are seven times more likely to report physical or sexual abuse at the hands of their partners than the US national average for domestic violence, a study published Monday found.

The study comes as a Republican senatorial candidate triggered a firestorm of criticism after he suggested that “legitimate rape” rarely causes pregnancy.

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Explaining his complete opposition to abortion, even in the instance of rape, Representative Todd Akin said pregnancy from rape was rare because of biological reactions to “legitimate rape.”

“First of all, from what I understand from doctors, (pregnancy from rape) is really rare,” Akin said in an interview widely distributed by Democrats.

“If it’s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.”

A previous study found that five percent of rape incidents result in a pregnancy among women of reproductive age and estimated that rape causes more than 32,000 pregnancies in the United States every year.

Monday’s study by the Guttmacher Institute, a non-profit concerned with reproductive health and abortion rights, said poverty, relationship problems and disruptive events such as losing a job led women to terminate pregnancies.

The study aimed to help understand why poor women are far more likely to terminate a pregnancy than their more affluent counterparts.

Poor women accounted for 42 percent of the 1.21 million abortions performed in the United States in 2008, up from 27 percent of the 1.31 million abortions performed in 2000.

Seven percent of the women surveyed by Guttmacher after seeking an abortion reported that they had been physically or sexually abused by the man with whom they became pregnant. National surveys have found that slightly more than one percent of US women report abuse at the hands of their partners.

Poor women, meanwhile, were twice as likely to say they had been physically or sexually abused by the man who impregnated them than abortion-seekers with higher incomes (9.3 percent versus 4.4 percent.)

The researchers cautioned that these numbers should be considered a “conservative” measure of the degree of abuse because women often don’t acknowledge that they’ve been forced into a sexual act or physically hurt by their partners.